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My attempt to decipher the MJK in situ photograph

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  • RockySullivan
    replied
    This thread reminds me of a marble bathroom at a house i lived in. Overtime I shat or showered I could see hundreds of faces and creatures in the marble walls. They were clear as day. Did I think somehow the marble walls had creatures living in them frozen in time? No...well maybe a little but not really. It's pretty easy to see something that's not really there.

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  • spyglass
    replied
    Originally posted by belinda View Post
    I cannot make out any words on the wall
    Neither can I.

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  • belinda
    replied
    I cannot make out any words on the wall

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  • Karl
    replied
    Originally posted by belinda View Post
    They still had to have some kind of evidence and a name that may or may not be on a wall is not evidence
    But it would be enough that they would question him.

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  • belinda
    replied
    Originally posted by Pierre View Post
    The Metropolitan police arrested a lot of people without having what we would call evidence.
    They still had to have some kind of evidence and a name that may or may not be on a wall is not evidence

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  • Pierre
    replied
    Originally posted by SirJohnFalstaff View Post
    reading The Blackest Streets by Sara Wise.
    This is in reference of the Prevention of Crimes Act of 1871.

    Apparently, you didn't need evidence to arrest someone you find suspicious. And once arrested, if the person had two prior convictions, the mandatory minimum was two years.
    And in practice looking "foreign", having the "right" height and carrying around a bag close to a murder scene could be sufficient.

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  • SirJohnFalstaff
    replied
    Originally posted by belinda View Post
    Oh Come on Pierre. With all your knowledge you must realise he could not have been arrested without evidence.
    reading The Blackest Streets by Sara Wise.
    This is in reference of the Prevention of Crimes Act of 1871.

    Apparently, you didn't need evidence to arrest someone you find suspicious. And once arrested, if the person had two prior convictions, the mandatory minimum was two years.

    Leave a comment:


  • Pierre
    replied
    A question for packers stem

    Originally posted by packers stem View Post
    Compare the highlighted signature to this one at your leisure
    Hi packers stem,

    I have an important question for you.

    If the name "Sickert" was written on a wall of the murder scene of Mary Jane Kelly -

    WHY didnīt the police go and arrest Sickert?

    Pierre

    Leave a comment:


  • Pierre
    replied
    Originally posted by belinda View Post
    Oh Come on Pierre. With all your knowledge you must realise he could not have been arrested without evidence.
    The Metropolitan police arrested a lot of people without having what we would call evidence.

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  • MysterySinger
    replied
    Did MJK2 exist given the MJK3 is probably fake.

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  • Karl
    replied
    Originally posted by belinda View Post
    Oh Come on Pierre. With all your knowledge you must realise he could not have been arrested without evidence.
    It does stand to reason, however, that if there were names scribbled on the wall that the police would take note of this. Of course, the very last thing I would presume, were I an investigator, is that the author of said scribblings would be the murderer. If a building burns down and "H. Simpson was here" was found on the ruins, would one assume we had the arsonist's name?

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  • belinda
    replied
    Oh Come on Pierre. With all your knowledge you must realise he could not have been arrested without evidence.

    Leave a comment:


  • Karl
    replied
    Originally posted by packers stem View Post
    Erm...because we have real copies of Sickert's signature. A signature is not a collection of letters it is a sweep of the pen.. It is distinct and that's why we sign documents etc.... It's distinctive to us.
    So they are. However, we have real copies of lots of people's signatures. What made you compare the unintelligible blots on a 100+ year photograph with that specific signature? I'll be up front and say I am more than suggesting wishful thinking here.


    Not the letters... My letter e will be exactly the same as millions of others but the way I put all the letters together will be distinctive.
    The overall flow of the signature is identical from what is visible to the known signature of Sickert whether you like it or not, it's the case.
    No it isn't, and I have already explained why. There are no "letters" going up on the "signature" in the MJK1 photo, whereas there is in the actual Sickert signature (the letter "k"). There is, however, a "letter" going down in the MJK1 photo, suggesting a "g", "q", "y", "p" or perhaps even an "f", but there are no letters going down in the Sickert signature. But you choose to conveniently ignore these facts, because they do not fit. You are, to quote Sherlock Holmes, shaping facts to suit theories rather than shaping theories to suit facts.


    If someone wants to test it maybe the images can be equally sized and printed onto plastic if possible then overlayed.
    The k is definitely there.
    Simply saying it is doesn't make it so. You picture that it is there. In reality, in can be anything. And "k" is not the top candidate.

    Maybe it's like art, some can see it,some can not.
    Or maybe it is like pareidolia, some can see it, some cannot. So far that is a far better theory than Walter Sickert placing his signature at the crime scene for god knows what reason. Not only place his signature, but do so just as perfectly as he would on paper. I challenge you to write on a wall, maybe a blackboard, and manage to copy your regular signature perfectly. I discovered when I worked as a substitute teacher that writing on a vertical surface was harder than expected. And the surface of the wall - be it wallpaper or anything else - would not be the same as the surface on paper. I enjoy writing in ink, with fountain pens, and if it's the wrong kind of paper, the writing may easily bleed. If wallpaper, it might be too soft for the nib (it'd dig into the wallpaper and you would definitely not be able to write well, much less copy your signature perfectly), and if wooden panels the grain would obstruct the nib in a different manner. So what was the ink? And what was the surface? And what was the pen? And why didn't the police spot it? And why on earth was it there to begin with? I put it to you that it was never there in the first place - it is only there for those who want it to be there.


    Strange though that people I've shown it to on my phone who are not ripperologists and are neutral can see it straight away..... No axe to grind,no theory to protect.
    I just showed the image to my fiancé, who has no interest one way or another anyway. I even tilted it a bit in your favour and asked if she could read the signature. She said she couldn't see a signature. She said she cannot rule out that there might be something written there, but that it is impossible to tell what. I can ask my colleagues at work tomorrow, if you wish. They have no axes to grind in this matter, either. Edit: Make that on Monday. Forgot it's Friday already.


    I said earlier that it's not possible to convince someone who refuses to be convinced so I won't argue the point further, the point can't be won one way or the other
    I'm not the one who refuses to be convinced, here. If there were intelligible letters there, I would have no reason not to admit it at all. I have no pet theory as to the MJK murder, except that I do not believe MJK3 is authentic. Other than that, I am completely on the fence on everything else. But I'm not going to pretend I see something when I do not. You, on the other hand, are the one who insists that not only is this a signature, but specifically that of Walter Sickert.
    Last edited by Karl; 10-30-2015, 04:29 PM.

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  • Pierre
    replied
    Were the police not able to read?

    Hi packers stem,

    I have an important question for you.

    If the name "Sickert" was written on a wall of the murder scene of Mary Jane Kelly -

    WHY didnīt the police go and arrest Sickert?

    Pierre

    Leave a comment:


  • packers stem
    replied
    Originally posted by Karl View Post
    What are the odds? Pretty good, I'd say. The reason I don't see "Sickert" is not because I refuse to see it, but rather the opposite: the only way I can see "Sickert" is if I force myself to see it. And I do not see a "k" either, for that matter. Where the "k" should be, I see simply a dark patch which goes neither high nor low. It could be any of these letters: m, n, o, v, w... but it has no top part, like the "k" does, unless you derive that from a patch of different colour above it. And then only if you include a sliver of the patch, which is otherwise indistinct from the rest of the blob which is in lighter colour from the rest of the alleged signature. And you still ignore that the dark colour of the signature indicates that one of the letters goes low, in the middle there. I'm sorry, but of all the names that could possibly be, were it even a signature, "Sickert" is not among the candidates. What makes you so sure it doesn't say "Simpson", for example?
    Erm...because we have real copies of Sickert's signature. A signature is not a collection of letters it is a sweep of the pen.. It is distinct and that's why we sign documents etc.... It's distinctive to us.
    Not the letters... My letter e will be exactly the same as millions of others but the way I put all the letters together will be distinctive.
    The overall flow of the signature is identical from what is visible to the known signature of Sickert whether you like it or not, it's the case.
    If someone wants to test it maybe the images can be equally sized and printed onto plastic if possible then overlayed.
    The k is definitely there.Maybe it's like art, some can see it,some can not.
    Strange though that people I've shown it to on my phone who are not ripperologists and are neutral can see it straight away..... No axe to grind,no theory to protect.
    I said earlier that it's not possible to convince someone who refuses to be convinced so I won't argue the point further, the point can't be won one way or the other

    Leave a comment:

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